mardi, juillet 03, 2007
TF
i still don't see what's the point in a Simpson movie.
i still can't get over the insane transformations and the funky camera angles and the non stop 2+ hrs. wowz.
oh and nobody kissed, no romantic hugs, no soppy moments, nobody declared their love for anybody. and the guy and the girl din really get into it. finally someone realises that any decent testosterone-filled guy watching such a movie would be more interested in the slug-pumping than irksome romance side-stories.
watch the movie on DVD, in Slow-Motion.
some movie info:
Bay: "The Generation One robots were very blocky which would have been like using the unarticulated marshmallow man from ‘Ghostbusters.’ Our Optimus Prime® has 10,108 parts, each of which move." (Rep, love the G1 but have to agree).
Bay: "These robots are the most complex modules ILM has ever made. We couldn’t have accomplished this two years ago.
Script secret during shoot with actors only receiving pages for own scenes.
Hardware "borrowed" included CV-22 (combo helicopter and airplane), F-117, C-130 cargo planes, C-17 (Bay: "spooky gun ship"), and F-22 Raptor (Starscream I think).
- It takes ILM 38 hours to render one frame of movement. Generally I think it takes 24 frames for one second of footage. Usually there are render farms (basically a building full of servers) for this so not sure if it means that value is X computers times taking Y minutes = 38 hours per frame or if it means one huge render farm working took 38 hours.
http://transformerslive.blogspot.com/2007/06/eni-transformers-articles.html
TF
woo i like transformers. great pace of action, bewildering battles, cool transformations, rather realistic stuff. and i like Industrial Light and Magic. yupz.
i still don't see what's the point in a Simpson movie.
i still can't get over the insane transformations and the funky camera angles and the non stop 2+ hrs. wowz.
oh and nobody kissed, no romantic hugs, no soppy moments, nobody declared their love for anybody. and the guy and the girl din really get into it. finally someone realises that any decent testosterone-filled guy watching such a movie would be more interested in the slug-pumping than irksome romance side-stories.
watch the movie on DVD, in Slow-Motion.
some movie info:
Bay: "The Generation One robots were very blocky which would have been like using the unarticulated marshmallow man from ‘Ghostbusters.’ Our Optimus Prime® has 10,108 parts, each of which move." (Rep, love the G1 but have to agree).
Bay: "These robots are the most complex modules ILM has ever made. We couldn’t have accomplished this two years ago.
Script secret during shoot with actors only receiving pages for own scenes.
Hardware "borrowed" included CV-22 (combo helicopter and airplane), F-117, C-130 cargo planes, C-17 (Bay: "spooky gun ship"), and F-22 Raptor (Starscream I think).
- It takes ILM 38 hours to render one frame of movement. Generally I think it takes 24 frames for one second of footage. Usually there are render farms (basically a building full of servers) for this so not sure if it means that value is X computers times taking Y minutes = 38 hours per frame or if it means one huge render farm working took 38 hours.
http://transformerslive.blogspot.com/2007/06/eni-transformers-articles.html
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